Abstract

BackgroundMost fungi, including entomopathogenic fungi, have two different conidiation patterns, normal and microcycle conidiation, under different culture conditions, eg, in media containing different nutrients. However, the mechanisms underlying the conidiation pattern shift are poorly understood.ResultsIn this study, Metarhizium acridum undergoing microcycle conidiation on sucrose yeast extract agar (SYA) medium shifted to normal conidiation when the medium was supplemented with sucrose, nitrate, or phosphate. By linking changes in nutrients with the conidiation pattern shift and transcriptional changes, we obtained conidiation pattern shift libraries by Solexa/Illumina deep-sequencing technology. A comparative analysis demonstrated that the expression of 137 genes was up-regulated during the shift to normal conidiation, while the expression of 436 genes was up-regulated at the microcycle conidiation stage. A comparison of subtractive libraries revealed that 83, 216, and 168 genes were related to sucrose-induced, nitrate-induced, and phosphate-induced conidiation pattern shifts, respectively. The expression of 217 genes whose expression was specific to microcycle conidiation was further analyzed by the gene expression profiling via multigene concatemers method using mRNA isolated from M. acridum grown on SYA and the four normal conidiation media. The expression of 142 genes was confirmed to be up-regulated on standard SYA medium. Of these 142 genes, 101 encode hypothetical proteins or proteins of unknown function, and only 41 genes encode proteins with putative functions. Of these 41 genes, 18 are related to cell growth, 10 are related to cell proliferation, three are related to the cell cycle, three are related to cell differentiation, two are related to cell wall synthesis, two are related to cell division, and seven have other functions. These results indicate that the conidiation pattern shift in M. acridum mainly results from changes in cell growth and proliferation.ConclusionsThe results indicate that M. acridum shifts conidiation pattern from microcycle conidiation to normal conidiation when there is increased sucrose, nitrate, or phosphate in the medium during microcycle conidiation. The regulation of conidiation patterning is a complex process involving the cell cycle and metabolism of M. acridum. This study provides essential information about the molecular mechanism of the induction of the conidiation pattern shift by single nutrients.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2971-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Most fungi, including entomopathogenic fungi, have two different conidiation patterns, normal and microcycle conidiation, under different culture conditions, eg, in media containing different nutrients

  • The results showed that normal conidiation occurred on 1/4 Sabouraud’s dextrose agar medium (SDAY) and the three nutrient-rich media, and conidiophores and normal conidiation occurred 21 h post-inoculation, while microcycle conidia were produced on sucrose yeast extract agar (SYA) medium during this period

  • Conidiation pattern shift of M. acridum in response to different nutrients To investigate the effects of single nutrients on the conidiation pattern shift, M. acridum was grown on the microcycle conidiation medium (SYA), normal conidiation medium (1/4 SDAY), and SYA medium supplemented with sucrose, nitrate, or phosphate

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Summary

Introduction

Most fungi, including entomopathogenic fungi, have two different conidiation patterns, normal and microcycle conidiation, under different culture conditions, eg, in media containing different nutrients. Most filamentous fungi have two conidiation patterns: normal and microcycle conidiation [3]. Normal conidiation is the most common reproductive mode of filamentous fungi [4], and microcycle conidiation is a survival mechanism under stress conditions, whereby the normal lifecycle is bypassed [3, 5,6,7,8]. The conidiation patterns can be shifted from normal to microcycle conidiation under various conditions, such as high and/or low temperature [6, 10, 11], high and/or low pH [12, 13], high salt concentration [14], and the presence of certain nutrients [7, 10, 15, 16]. The molecular mechanisms of the conidiation pattern shift in response to nutrients have not been elucidated

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